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Itβs a different kind of false confidence.
Not only is AI getting harder to spot, but now we donβt even know that weβre wrong. Australian scientists found that people are becoming overconfident about their ability to tell real and digital faces apart, which can make us susceptible to misinformation and fraud.
βPeople have been confident of their ability to spot a fake face,β said study author Dr. James Dunn of the University of South Walesβ School of Psychology. βBut the faces created by the most advanced face-generation systems arenβt so easily detectable anymore.β
To test our AI detection abilities, the Aussie researchers surveyed 125 people β 89 people with average face-identifying prowess and 36 people with exceptional powers of recognition, termedΒ super recognizers, per the study published in the βBritish Journal of Psychology.β
Participants were shown images of faces β which were vetted beforehand for obvious flaws βand had them to determine whether they were real or AI.
Researchers found that people with βaverage face-recognition abilityβ performed only a tad better than chance, per Dunn.
For instance, Post guinea pigs scored an unimpressive 3 out of 6 on this βhuman test,β meaning we wouldβve fared the same had we flipped a coin.
Meanwhile, super recognizers performed better than the control group in the face-off, but it was only by a βslim margin,β according to Dr. Dunn.
One constant? A misplaced belief in their powers of detection. βWhat was consistent was peopleβs confidence in their ability to spot an AI-generated faceβeven when that confidence wasnβt matched by their actual performance,β Dunn quipped.
Part of the problem is that AI facial technology has become so sophisticated we canβt spot the fake using familiar cues. While AI faces previously sported βdistorted teeth, glasses that merged into facesβ and other βheadβ giveaways, advanced generators have made these imperfections much less common.
However, as we still look for the regular red flags, this instills us with the aforementioned βfakeβ bravado.
Nowadays, the AI-mpersonators are paradoxically identified not by their flaws, but by their lack thereof.
βIronically, the most advanced AI faces arenβt given away by whatβs wrong with them, but by whatβs too right,β said fellow author Dr. Amy Dawel, a psychologist with Australian National University (ANU). βRather than obvious glitches, they tend to be unusually averageβhighly symmetrical, well-proportioned and statistically typical.β
βItβs almost as if theyβre too good to be true as faces,β she lamented
And, given how frequently super recognizers were fooled, itβs clear that AI detection is not a skill people can easily learn.
Our lacking powers of detection β as well as our misplaced confidence in them β are concerning given the rise of increasingly naturalistic catfishing schemes and other digital trickery. Last winter, TikTok users exposedΒ hyperrealistic AI-generated deepfake doctorsΒ who were hornswoggling social media users with unfounded medical advice.
As such, we need to have a βhealthy level of skepticism,β per Dr. Dunn. βFor a long time, weβve been able to look at a photograph and assume weβre seeing a real person,β he said. βThat assumption is now being challenged.β
Scientists believe that the solution could perhaps lie with a new type of facial recognition wizard that they inadvertently stumbled upon during the experiment.
βOur research has revealed that some people are already sleuths at spotting AI-faces, suggesting there may be βsuper-AI-face-detectorsβ out there,β he said. βWe want to learn more about how these people are able to spot these fake faces, what clues they are using, and see if these strategies can be taught to the rest of us.β

